About Kidney Stone Analysis
- Analysis of all kidney stones is important, regardless of their size. Analysis gives the urologist and the patient important information that can help prevent additional stones from forming.
- The doctor or lab provides a strainer to catch the stone. The patient uses the strainer during each urination and examines it afterward for the stone, which may be as small as a grain of sand.
- The patient places the collected stone loosely in a clean dry container or plastic bag and then delivers it to the lab. Before analyzing the kidney stone, the lab will remove any blood and tissue present.
- In some cases, the kidney stone does not pass and the urologist must extract it. This involves testing to locate and size the stone and determine the proper course of action.
- According to Quest Diagnostics, most kidney stones--approximately 80 percent--contain calcium, as either calcium oxalate, calcium phosphate or a combination. Another 10 to 15 percent of kidney stones consist of magnesium ammonium phosphate, also known as struvite, while 5 to 10 percent are uric acid stones. Less than 1 percent of stones are cystine.